long-grasser

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English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From longgrass +‎ -er.

Noun

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long-grasser (plural long-grassers)

  1. (colloquial) A homeless indigenous person living in the longgrass region.
    • 2000, Ian Jack, Australia: The New New World, →ISBN, page 205:
      Usually they were first-person accounts of Darwin politics from the viewpoint of a 'long-grasser', or a homeless drinker around town.
    • 2004, Michael Christie, John Greatorex, “Yolngu Life in the Northern Territory of Australia: The Significance of Community and Social Capital”, in Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration, volume 26, number 1:
      This article uses concepts from Yolngu philosophy to explore these perspectives in three contexts: at the former mission settlements, at homeland centres, and among “long-grassers” in Darwin.
    • 2011, Stephen Gray, The Protectors: A Journey Through Whitefella Past, →ISBN:
      But Miss Harriet Douglas was no long-grasser.
    • 2015, Emma Kowal, Trapped in the Gap: Doing Good in Indigenous Australia, →ISBN, page 69:
      The dense racial politics and the indeterminacy of the long-grasser problem at the Tiwi shops make this a paradigmatic contact zone.